Description

Centipede Original Arcade Poster (Atari 1981) - Never Released to the Public Never-released original color 24 x 36 poster for the classic 1981 Atari arcade game Centipede, which depicts a nude female model with centipede-inspired body paint emerging from mist and a trio of large mushrooms. The lower portion features a light blue Atari logo and the game’s classic green logo wraps around the periphery of the poster image. Rolled and in very good to fine condition, with tack holes to corners, scattered small creases, and light edgewear, none of which truly detract from the stunning artwork. From the collection of former Atari employee Wendi Allen, who worked for Atari coin-op engineering as both a hardware and software engineer, and as the principal electrical engineer who ushered Atari's vector graphics hardware to market. Allen notes: ‘When Centipede was getting ready to be marketed, the art department created a somewhat surrealistic poster containing a lady painted in green to represent a centipede. A small number of these posters were printed, but management felt it was too risqué to distribute. The art department was told to create a G-rated poster, which they did. The original posters remained within Atari.’

4278 
Go to lot
<
>

Centipede Original Arcade Poster (Atari 1981) - Never Released to the Public Never-released original color 24 x 36 poster for the classic 1981 Atari arcade game Centipede, which depicts a nude female model with centipede-inspired body paint emerging from mist and a trio of large mushrooms. The lower portion features a light blue Atari logo and the game’s classic green logo wraps around the periphery of the poster image. Rolled and in very good to fine condition, with tack holes to corners, scattered small creases, and light edgewear, none of which truly detract from the stunning artwork. From the collection of former Atari employee Wendi Allen, who worked for Atari coin-op engineering as both a hardware and software engineer, and as the principal electrical engineer who ushered Atari's vector graphics hardware to market. Allen notes: ‘When Centipede was getting ready to be marketed, the art department created a somewhat surrealistic poster containing a lady painted in green to represent a centipede. A small number of these posters were printed, but management felt it was too risqué to distribute. The art department was told to create a G-rated poster, which they did. The original posters remained within Atari.’

Estimate 1 000 - 1 500 USD
Starting price 200 USD

* Not including buyer’s premium.
Please read the conditions of sale for more information.

Sale fees: 24.98 %
Leave an absentee bid

For sale on Thursday 22 Aug - 18:00 (EDT)
amherst, United States
RR Auction
+16037324284
Browse the catalogue Sales terms Sale info

You may also like

Atari: Gravitar Arcade Video Game (1982) Desirable original Gravitar arcade video game manufactured by Atari, Inc., and originally released in August 1982. Housed in its original cabinet, 25.25″ x 72.25″ x 31.5″, with incredible sci-fi graphics to side panels, marquee, and control plate, which features game instructions and buttons for number of players and controls: rotate left and right, fire, thrust, and tractor/shield. The back features the Atari manufacturing label, identifying this machine as Model No. 33100 and Serial NO. UR00247. Gravitar has a 1 or 2-player game option and features a color X-Y video display. This new display, with its three color guns and higher voltage, has the same technology that was used in previous Atari black-and-white X-Y displays. However, the screen now displays dazzling colors and unique visual effects. The player controls a spaceship in three different solar systems, with each solar system consisting of a home base, a death star, a red alien planet, and four regular planets. In fine, fully functioning condition, with trivial scuffs and wear to the cabinet. Developed in 14 months, Gravitar was the first game that Mike Hally produced and designed for Atari. The game’s concept was based on a combination of Lunar Lander and Asteroids, and was the first game to have a real-time dynamic perspective; when you enter a planet, the screen zooms in to give you a closer look. In pop culture, Gravitar cabinets appear in the 1983 movie WarGames, in the 1983 James Bond movie Never Say Never Again, and in the 1987 Charles Bronson vehicle, Death Wish 4: The Crackdown. A rare Atari arcade cabinet as only 5,427 cabinets of Gravitar were ever produced.